Works of the Camden Society, Band 105

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Camden Society, 1872

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Seite iv - SOCIETY desire it to be understood that they are not answerable for any opinions or observations that may appear in the Society's publications; the Editors of the several Works being alone responsible for the same.
Seite 161 - That the Clergy of England convened in any Convocation or Synod, or otherwise, have no power to make any Constitutions, Canons, or Acts whatsoever in matter of Doctrine, discipline, or otherwise, to bind the Clergy or Laity of the Land, without common consent of Parliament.
Seite 161 - That the several constitutions and canons made and agreed to in the convocations or synods above mentioned, do contain in them many matters contrary to the king's prerogative, to the fundamental laws and statutes of this realm, to the rights of parliament, to the property and liberty of the subject, and matters tending to sedition, and of dangerous consequence.
Seite 237 - I do hereby freely promise, and engage myself, to be true and faithful to the Lord Protector and the Commonwealth of England, Scotland and Ireland ; and shall not [according to the tenor of the Indenture whereby I am returned to serve in this present Parliament) propose, or give my consent, to alter the Government as it is settled in a Single Person and a Parliament."^ Sign that, or go home again to your countries.
Seite 36 - The Montgomery Manuscripts, containing accounts of the colonization of the Ardes, in the county of Down, in the reigns of Elizabeth and James- Memoirs of the First, Second, and Third Viscounts Montgomery, &c.
Seite 154 - They are exceeding dear,' writes John Turbervill in September 1640, 'not a good one to be gotten under £10, a very poor one for five or six pounds' (Trevelyan Papers, iii, 194). Capt. John Hodgson complains that in 1662 his buff coat was taken away from him by a Royalist official, adding, ' I would not have taken ten pounds for it' (Life of Captain Hodgson, ed.
Seite 280 - This is a true particuler of all my estate reall and personall for which I only desire to compound to free it out of Sequestracion, and doe submitt unto and undertake to satisfie such fine as by the...
Seite 213 - Worcester's, was this day read the third time and, upon the question, passed ; and ordered to be sent unto the Lords for their concurrence." Oliver himself, as we shall find, has been dangerously sick. This is what Clement Walker, the splenetic Presbyterian, " an elderly gentleman of low stature, in a gray suit, with a little stick in his hand...
Seite 161 - Constitutions and canons ecclesiastical, treated upon by the archbishops of Canterbury and York, presidents of the convocations for the respective provinces of Canterbury and York, and the rest of the bishops and clergy of those provinces, and agreed upon with the king's majesty's license in their several synods begun at London and York MDCXL.
Seite 293 - Hundred were to send 30 men for every day ; the third week Hemyock Hundred 20 men for every day ; the fourth week Halberton Hundred were to send 20 men for every day ; and the fifth week Bampton Hundred to send 20 men for every day : but for those which would not or could not come conveniently, being far distant, that they send after the rate of Sd. for every man per diem, and we of these parts would procure men in their places.

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